Diamond Sawblades Mfr. Coal. v. United States

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In 2006, the Department of Commerce announced that it was changing a method it used to calculate whether imported goods are being sold in the United States at less than fair value, i.e., being dumped. Previously, Commerce employed “zeroing” in that calculation: for goods sold above fair value, Commerce treated the sale price as being at (rather than above) fair value—it zeroed out margins above fair value and permitted no offset against below-fair-value sales in calculation of the average, resulting in larger average dumping margins than if offsetting had been allowed. The new policy generally made it more difficult to find dumping. Commerce stated that the change would apply “in all current and future antidumping investigations as of the effective date” and that it would apply the final modification to all investigations pending as of the effective date. There were seven such investigations, all initiated by petitions filed after March 6, 2006, when the new no-zeroing policy was proposed. Two companies found to have engaged in dumping argued that their cases were governed by the new policy. The Federal Circuit upheld Commerce’s determination that they were not. Commerce spoke ambiguously on timing in adopting its new policy and reasonably resolved the ambiguity to exclude the cases. View "Diamond Sawblades Mfr. Coal. v. United States" on Justia Law